Wednesday, October 29, 2014

As I wrap up my second year of service on the
Groundwater Foundation Board of Directors, I wanted to provide some updates on the positive
mission of the Foundation.

We just returned from a Board meeting in Las Vegas and,
more importantly, the Community-based Groundwater Protection Forum put on by
the Foundation the following day.The
passion of the Forum attendees to protect our most precious resource was
contagious.Along with the passion, the
Groundwater Foundation’s collaborative approach to protecting groundwater at
the source left all attendees returning to their communities with concrete
“deliverables” to act upon.

Passion +
Action = Protection

These qualities were also on display as the
Groundwater Foundation honored long-time volunteer Bob Kuzelka with its highest
honor, the annual Maurice Kremer Groundwater Achievement Award.Along with his many years of academic and
community involvement in water issues, Bob was the leading force in the design,
development, and implementation of the Foundation’s Groundwater Guardian
program.It was so fitting to honor Bob
at the Forum lunch and a hearty congratulations is due.

My final take away from Las Vegas involves a taxi
ride.My driver was a 20 year Las Vegas
resident.As a member of the building
trade, he was hit hard by the 2008 recession. But, he recently had the ability
to purchase a new home and was so proud to
tell me about his involvement in a program sponsored by the Southern Nevada
Water Authority (our great host in Las Vegas) to convert his turf into desert
landscaping.The Authority’s Water Smart
Landscape Rebate program is exactly the kind of program that needs to
spread.Like my taxi driver and the Southern Nevada Water
Authority, let’s all work together on the important mission of the Groundwater
Foundation.

Friday, October 24, 2014

In the fall issue of The Aquifer, Groundwater Foundation
President Emeritus Susan Seacrest reflected on the 40th anniversary of the Safe
Drinking Water Act (SDWA). The Act, which was signed into law in 1974, ensures
the drinking water delivered to consumers by public water systems meets high
standards to protect human health.

In her article, Susan talks about how drinking an ordinary
glass of water represents a moment of great trust between citizens and their
government; the trust that the water is safe.

While this trust is reinforced by legislation such as the
SDWA, there is another layer of trust that may literally be eroding. Report
after report suggest that the nation's water infrastructure is nearing the end
of its life. From pipes to treatment technology, the world is changing and
infrastructure needs to change along with it. A recent article from Circle of Blue discusses the issue:

“Water reserves are diminishing in the West. Rainstorms are
growing more intense as the planet warms. Waterways that once were nearly
scrubbed of pollutants are becoming overloaded with nutrients. These and other
indicators – Depression-era distribution pipes and a deluge of new
pharmaceutical and chemical contaminants – are evidence that the water-cleaning
and water-moving systems that were designed and installed to contend with
different conditions generations ago are nearing the end of their design lives.
American infrastructure needs to be updated, expanded, redesigned, and, in many
cases, reinvented for 21st-century challenges."

Cost, of course, is the main factor in lagging
infrastructure improvements. AWWA reports that it could cost near $1 trillion.
And unlike the 1970s, when the SDWA was enacted and the federal government
helped fund the lion's share of capital investment in water and wastewater
infrastructure, the burden now lies with state and local agencies.

While the trust we place in our government to ensure the
water we drink is safe is justified, it's important that we at citizens support
efforts to improve the nation's water infrastructure, which enables the safe
water to be delivered to our taps.

What do you think needs to be done to address the issue of aging infrastructure? Whose responsibility is it to foot the bill for the improvements?

Thursday, October 9, 2014

By Amy Kessner, The Groundwater FoundationOctober is the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA's) WaterSense program's Shower Better month. Showering accounts for nearly 17% of residential indoor water use - that's about 40 gallons a day for the average family! Converting inefficient showerheads to WaterSense showerheads can help save the average family 2,900 gallons of water each year, conserve enough energy to power a home for 13 days, and reduce the average family water and energy costs by $70 per year! That's a lot of water waiting to be conserved!

In celebration of Shower Better month, some areas around the country are giving away FREE WaterSense showerheads! Make sure to check with your local water conservation office to see if your area is participating.Replacing your showerhead is not the only way to save water and cut back on your energy bill while showering! Check out these other tips for saving water while showering:

Limit your shower time to 5 minutes

Don't let the water run while waiting to warm up OR collect the water in a bucket while it is warming up and use it later to water plants

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Yesterday,
when it was pouring rain (inches & inches of rain) I began to wonder:how old is this water?Where has it been before?This
thought process was all prompted by an article I’d seen in the Washington Post
saying earth’s water could be older than the sun.To read the article: